April 17, 2025
|Better & Cheaper
Apple’s latest MacBook Air M4 brings some welcome—if modest—improvements to one of the most popular laptops on the market.
With better performance, improved external display support, and a slightly lower starting price, the M4 Air positions itself as a solid choice for students and light users. But for many folks, the older M3 Air may still be the smarter buy.
The jump from M3 to M4 isn’t groundbreaking, but there are real gains:
The fanless design still leads to thermal throttling under sustained loads like video editing or multi-minute Cinebench tests. While performance is solid for everyday use and light creative work, anyone with serious media workloads should look toward the MacBook Pro.
In short bursts, the M4 feels fast and responsive, and it comfortably beats out Windows competitors in single-core performance. That said, creative professionals may see little difference from the M3 or even M2 in real-world apps like Premiere Pro or Photoshop due to hardware limitations like a single media engine.
If you're buying a new laptop and want a machine under $1,000, the M4 MacBook Air is a great choice. It’s quiet, efficient, and offers enough performance for most users.
However, for those with light computing needs, the now-discounted M3 MacBook Air offers nearly identical real-world performance for a lower price. The M4’s enhancements—while welcome—aren’t significant enough to make the M3 feel outdated.
Buy the M4 if:
Buy the discounted M3 if:
In a landscape where Windows laptops are getting more expensive, Apple’s move to lower pricing—while maintaining a polished, dependable experience—makes the MacBook Air a standout in the ultralight category once again.